Singapore's Exclusive Distributor · Engineered Integrated Door & Window System
Technical·7 min read

Why windows leak in Singapore's weather — and how drainage prevents it.

A window does not keep water out by sealing it out entirely. It keeps water out by managing the water that inevitably gets in. That difference is the whole story.

Why windows leak in Singapore's weather — and how drainage prevents it.
In this article
  1. The counter-intuitive truth about leaks
  2. How engineered drainage works
  3. Why cheaper windows leak
  4. What to check before you buy

Few things unsettle a homeowner more than a stain spreading under a window after a storm. In Singapore, where a tropical downpour can arrive sideways on the wind, leaking windows are one of the most common — and most preventable — renovation regrets. The cause is almost never bad luck. It is drainage.

The counter-intuitive truth about leaks

This surprises people: a well-made window does not try to seal water out completely. Wind-driven rain will always push a little moisture past the outer line. The job of the frame is to catch that water and guide it back outside before it ever reaches your wall. A window that relies only on sealing every gap is a window waiting to fail, because seals are exactly what age and shrink over time.

The principle

Good windows are designed to manage water, not merely block it. Sealing slows the water down; drainage decides where it goes. You need both — and the second is the one cheaper windows skip.

How engineered drainage works

Inside a system profile is a deliberate path for water. Rain that gets past the outer seal is caught, channelled, and drained back outside through concealed points — a designed sequence rather than a hope that one seal holds.

1
Rain is driven against the outer seal, and a little gets past — as it always will.
2
It collects in an internal channel built into the profile, away from the interior.
3
A sloped floor carries the water along the frame under gravity.
4
It exits through concealed drainage points to the outside — no holes across the face.

Pair that path with the triple sealing of a genuine system window, and the frame handles water as an engineered system — not a single line of defence.

Why cheaper windows leak

Notice how many of these are the same shortcuts that separate an assembled window from an engineered one. Leaks are rarely a single defect — they are the accumulation of small savings.

Homeowner tip

Drainage keeps more than water out. Concealed, sloped channels also deny insects and draughts the open holes they would otherwise use — part of why a well-engineered frame simply feels calmer to live behind.

What to check before you buy

Ask to see how the window drains. A good supplier can show you the internal channel and the concealed exit points, and explain the slope. If the answer is a row of holes drilled through the outer frame — or no clear answer at all — you have learned something important. For the full set of on-site checks, see our seven ways to tell a real system window.

Key takeaways

Common questions

Why does my window leak only during heavy rain?

Heavy, wind-driven rain pushes more water past the outer seal than the frame can drain — or the drainage is poorly designed and water backs up. In a well-engineered window, internal sloped channels carry that water back outside; in a cheaper one, it overflows toward the wall.

Can window leaks be fixed, or must the window be replaced?

Minor installation-gap leaks can sometimes be resealed. But if the leak comes from the window's own poor drainage design — flat channels, too few or exposed drain points, single-line sealing — resealing is a temporary patch. The reliable fix is a properly drained system.

Do system windows prevent leaks completely?

No window is magic, but an engineered system is designed to manage water rather than merely block it: multiple seals plus concealed sloped drainage. That is what keeps water away from your wall through years of tropical storms.

Is condensation the same as a leak?

No — condensation forms when warm humid air meets a cold surface, common on poorly insulated frames and single glazing. It looks like a leak but comes from the inside. Better insulation and glazing reduce it; drainage addresses rain from outside.

See how it drains

Ask to see where the water goes.

At the Experience Centre you can see the internal drainage of a system profile for yourself. Bring your home's trouble spots — we will show you exactly how the frame handles them.